Excerpted from Confronting the Evidence in Evidence-Based Prevention: Current Scientific and Political Challenges by Judith D. Auerbach, PhD and William Smith
Even where scientific consensus exists about what constitutes good
evidence for making policy decisions, it often is ignored or challenged
by people with ideological agendas that run counter to the evidence.
Such challenges have intensified over the past eight years. The
promotion of abstinence-only-until-marriage sex education and the
opposition to syringe exchange programs are perhaps the keenest
examples.
Abstinence-Only-Until-Marriage Programming
Over the past quarter century, nearly 1.5 billion federal tax
dollars have been allocated to the abstinence-only-until-marriage
approach to the prevention of HIV, other sexually transmitted diseases,
and unintended pregnancy. Since 1998, the U.S. government has offered
every state the opportunity to apply for grants (totaling $50 million
per year) that have as their “exclusive purpose teaching the social,
psychological, and health gains to be realized by abstaining from
sexual activity.” These programs are prohibited from discussing condoms
or contraception, except to emphasize their failure rates; the
“exclusive purpose” clause prevents communication of any other
risk-reduction messages—including discussion of condoms, a known
effective HIV prevention tool.
In 2001, social conservatives secured additional federal funds to
create the Community-Based Abstinence Education program, which provides
direct competitive grants for abstinence-only-until-marriage programs.
What began as a $20 million per year program has grown by 450%,
reaching a current total of $113 million. President Bush has proposed
increasing this funding stream to $141 million for Fiscal Year 2008.
These programs are conducted in diverse settings, from schools to
county health departments to right-wing-operated “crisis pregnancy
centers.” Few venues that are considered essential to conducting sound,
evidence-based health education have escaped the explosion in
abstinence-only-until-marriage funding. Furthermore, the U.S.
government has exported these programs to resource-limited countries
most affected by HIV/AIDS; U.S. funding for international programs that
promote the so-called “ABC” approach to HIV prevention—“abstain, be
faithful, use condoms”—favors the “A” and the “B” over the “C” in both
policy and dollars (see sidebar below).
Despite the exponential growth in abstinence-only-until-marriage
funding and programming at the state, federal, and international
levels, evidence from program evaluations simply does not support the
approach. Most recently, a large federally funded study found no
evidence that abstinence-only-until-marriage programs have achieved
their goal of increasing rates of sexual abstinence—the explicit
purpose of the programs.
The study, commissioned by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, enrolled more than 2,000 children and teenagers in four
states, and found that youth in the abstinence-only-until-marriage
program group were no more likely than those in the control group to
have abstained from sex: 49% in each group remained abstinent. In
addition, those who reported being sexually active had a similar
average age at sexual debut (14.9 years) and similar numbers of sexual
partners in the program and control groups.
These findings have sparked a welcome debate. On April 23, 2008,
concerned policy makers and medical experts testified during the
first-ever Congressional hearing on the effectiveness of federally
funded abstinence-only-until-marriage programs, held by the U.S. House
of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and led
by Chairman Henry Waxman (D-CA). Witnesses spoke of medically
inaccurate information provided by program materials, pressure to sign
“virginity pledges” in front of peers, and the alarmingly high numbers
of teenage girls with sexually transmitted infections—one in four,
according to CDC. “Continuing funding for ineffective abstinence-only
programs makes no sense,” said Congresswoman Barbara Lee (D-CA), author
of the Responsible Education about Life (REAL) Act, which would
initiate federal funding for comprehensive sex education.
The flaws in abstinence-only-until-marriage programs have not
escaped states’ attention. Seventeen states currently do not
participate in the grant program, and to date, 13 states have conducted
evaluations of their federally funded abstinence-only-until-marriage
programs; not a single one has found the programs to be a good
investment. By focusing on the lack of evidence to support
abstinence-only-until-marriage programming as a viable HIV prevention
tool, advocates have raised the standard of evidence for more
comprehensive behavioral interventions.